Episodes

  • Rep. Erin Houchin and Rep. Mike Flood join the show to discuss crypto policy in Congress and under the next Trump Administration. They give Rep. Crenshaw the 101 on how crypto works and how U.S. dollar-backed stable coins could change the financial system. And they look at the implications of Web 3.0 on censorship, content creators, financial fraud, and China’s global power moves.

    · The beginning of the crypto movement

    · NFTs: the beanie babies of the internet

    · The Canadian Trucker Strike

    · Gary Gensler – “a fountain of bad ideas at the SEC”

    · Regulatory authority in crypto markets

    · Stablecoins 101

    · Geopolitical implications of stablecoins

    · Disconnecting from the banks

    · President Trump’s Crypto Czar

    · Evolution of internet regulation

    · Web 3.0

    · Facebook’s stranglehold on content creators and local news

    · The Hawk Tuah Coin Scam

    · Cabbage Patch dolls!

    · FIT 21 – the House’s answer to crypto regulation

    · Explaining blockchain technology

    · Will quantum computers break crypto?

    · Stablecoins and financial fraud

    · China’s move to control the global stablecoin

    Congresswoman Erin Houchin represents the 9th District of Indiana. She currently serves on the House Financial Services Committee, the House Rules Committee, and the House Education and Workforce Committee. And she was recently appointed to serve on the House Energy and Commerce Committee in the 119th Congress. Follow her on X at @RepHouchin.

    Congressman Mike Flood represents the 1st District of Nebraska. He currently serves on the Financial Services Committee as well as the Housing and Insurance Subcommittee and the Digital Assets, Financial Technology and Inclusion Subcommittee. Follow him on X at @USRepMikeFlood.

    Listen to Rep. Crenshaw’s past episodes on Bitcoin with Rep. Patrick McHenry and Peter McCormack.

  • On episode 2 of the SITREP (Situation Report), Rep. Crenshaw drops the facts – not the Influencer Industrial Complex spin - on the Continuing Resolution that passed the House late Friday evening. He explains what was in the original CR that failed earlier this week and why it was so controversial. And he walks us through the reality of how budgets are negotiated in Congress.

    · Explanation of what a Continuing Resolution (CR) is

    · The federal budget process: appropriations vs. authorizations

    · Challenges of bipartisan compromise in budget negotiations

    · The role of the Senate in passing appropriations bills

    · The impact of a government shutdown and why CRs are common

    · Details about the latest CR negotiations, including:

    · Pharmacy Benefit Manager Price Transparency Act

    · Disaster aid and farm bill extensions

    · Restrictions on outbound investments to China

    · Expiring healthcare programs, such as traumatic brain injury research and the SUPPORT Act

    · Political misinformation about the CR (e.g., Ukraine aid, congressional pay raises)

    · The argument for and against a debt ceiling

    · The consequences of government shutdowns on families and national finances

    · Internal disagreements within Congress on legislative priorities

    · Explanation of suspension votes and their significance

    · Discussion on splitting legislation into smaller bills for voting

    · Updates on ongoing negotiations and possible outcomes

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  • We’re trying something new here on Hold These Truths: a weekly SITREP (Situation Report) on news of the day with real time insights into what’s happening in Congress, the country, and the world. This will now be your one stop shop for real news.

    Matt Gaetz ethics report AOC loses ranking member of Oversight Committee The Continuing Resolution Rethinking the budget process Unknowns in Syria Corruption in China’s military Assassinations in Moscow Salt Typhoon (not a James Bond movie) DOE’s ban on gas exports Trans activists lose their institutional support
  • John Spencer is the Chair of Urban Warfare Studies at the Modern War Institute at West Point. He joined Rep. Crenshaw to explore the historical evolution of urban combat and analyze modern strategies for conquering and defending cities. John discusses how urban warfare is playing out in Syria, Lebanon, Gaza, and Ukraine. And he envisions the most likely scenarios for a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, along with potential U.S.-Mexico counterinsurgency efforts against the cartels.

    • The evolution of urban warfare
    • Regime change and chaos in Syria
    • Why willpower often trumps raw numbers
    • Hezbollah’s decimation and its implications
    • Israeli airstrikes in post-Assad Syria
    • “The way you take a city is psychologically.”
    • Russia’s miscalculation in Kiev and Ukraine’s resistance
    • How Gaza’s conflict was unlike any other
    • Why banning missiles could result in more civilian casualties
    • Debunking the “Zero Dark Thirty” Fallacy
    • “Is that Batman??”
    • Why the pager operation wouldn’t have worked in Gaza
    • More common misconceptions: The Abacus, Vampire, and Peace Table Fallacies
    • Taiwan’s defenses and civilian preparation for invasion
    • U.S.-Mexico counterinsurgency strategies to combat cartels

    John Spencer currently serves as the Chair of Urban Warfare Studies at the Modern War Institute at West Point, Co-Director of the Urban Warfare Project, and host of the Urban Warfare Project podcast. He also serves as the Chair of Urban Warfare Studies with the Madison Policy Forum, a New York based think-tank. He is a founding member of the International Working Group on Subterranean Warfare.

    He is the author of three books: Understanding Urban Warfare, (Howgate Publishing, 2022), Connected Soldiers: Life, Leadership, and Social Connections in Modern War (Potomac Books, 2022; Winner of the 2023 Gold Medal Award, Best Military History Memoir, Military Writers Society of America), The Mini-Manual for the Urban Defender (John Spencer, 2022).

    Follow him on X at @SpencerGuard.

  • American Foreign Policy Council’s Ilan Berman gives us the 101 on the past, present, and possible future of the Iranian regime, Middle East geopolitics, and the potential for Starlink as a tool to topple authoritarian regimes.

    · What do the Iranian dissidents want from the United States?

    · Is the Iranian regime at a tipping point?

    · The changing demographics in Iran

    · How 1979 changed everything

    · The CIA boogeyman

    · Recapping U.S. – Iran historical relations

    · “They’ve had a gun to Israel’s head for a while.”

    · What’s the Iranian regime thinking now?

    · The cold-hearted rationality of Middle East politics

    · Why Iran might fast-track development of a nuclear bomb

    · Three scenarios for a post-ayatollah Iran

    · Why the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps isn’t going away

    · How Elon Musk’s Starlink could transform geopolitics

    · China’s race to dominate space-based digital connectivity

    · Africa’s population boom

    Ilan Berman is Senior Vice President of the American Foreign Policy Council in Washington, DC. An expert on regional security in the Middle East, Central Asia, and the Russian Federation, he has consulted for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency as well as the U.S. Departments of State and Defense, and has also provided assistance on foreign policy and national security issues to a range of governmental agencies and congressional offices. Follow him on X at @ilanberman.

  • David Harsanyi returns to discuss his new book “The Rise of BlueAnon: How the Democrats Became a Party of Conspiracy Theorists.” David reveals how the Left has been consumed by a uniquely dangerous and delusional brand of conspiracy theories. And unlike those on the Right, the Left’s conspiracy theories are rarely kept in check by mainstream institutions. Fun and insightful conversation with one of America’s smartest conservative writers.

    • How do we define a conspiracy theory?


    • The psychology of crowds


    • Why “Russia collusion” was an effective conspiracy theory


    • How Adam Schiff played everybody


    • The limits of skepticism


    • Victimhood and paranoia


    • The BLM riots and police assassinations


    • Why the left doesn’t want students to learn civics


    • “I wish someone would do something about how fat I am”


    • What people get wrong about Big Pharma


    • Antisemitism and the left


    • What happened to the groypers?


    • Social media and children’s mental health


    • Climate alarmism


    • Rachel Maddow and other successful purveyors of conspiracy theories


    • “You don’t need to be like your enemy.”


    • Delusions of living in The Handmaid’s Tale


    • The viability argument


    • How leftists sidestep the morality debate

    David Harsanyi is a senior writer at the Washington Examiner, a nationally syndicated columnist, and author of several bestselling books. A contributor to the New York Post, his work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Reason, USA Today, National Review, and numerous other publications, and he has been featured on Fox News, CNN, MSNBC, NPR, ABC World News Tonight, NBC Nightly News, and dozens of radio talk shows across the country. Follow him on X at @davidharsanyi.

  • Paul Scharre is an artificial intelligence expert who led the Department of Defense’s working group to establish policies on autonomous weapons systems. He joined Rep. Crenshaw to cover the latest (unclassified) capabilities of AI on the battlefield, the AI arms race with China, and the fine line between utopia and apocalypse which emerging AI tech has to offer us.

    • Equipping Congress to deal with Artificial Intelligence

    • How software has changed since the 1990s

    • No rules: the machine is learning on its own

    • Emergence of robots in the Iraq War

    • The Pentagon’s policy on autonomous weapons

    • Drones over Ukraine

    • The 4 Battlegrounds of Artificial Intelligence

    • The data race with China

    • “Why did ChatGPT say that?”

    • Chinese spies infiltrating American tech

    • Integrating more AI into the U.S. military

    • China’s 1984 Nightmare in Xinjiang Province

    • “They literally call it SkyNet.”

    • Scary hypotheticals for when AI “becomes human”

    • “We’ve seen models engage in spontaneous deception.”

    • AI cooperation agreements with China

    • How do we regulate the next frontiers of AI?

    • Could AI build a nuclear weapon?

    Paul Scharre is the Vice President and Director of Studies at the Center for a New American Security. He is the author of "Four Battlegrounds: Power in the Age of Artificial Intelligence" and "Army of None: Autonomous Weapons and the Future of War."

    Scharre previously worked in the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) where he played a leading role in establishing policies on unmanned and autonomous systems and emerging weapons technologies. He led the Department of Defense (DoD) working group that drafted DoD Directive 3000.09, establishing the department’s policies on autonomy in weapon systems. He also led DoD efforts to establish policies on intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance programs and directed energy technologies. Scharre was involved in the drafting of policy guidance in the 2012 Defense Strategic Guidance, 2010 Quadrennial Defense Review, and secretary-level planning guidance.

    Prior to joining OSD, Scharre served as a special operations reconnaissance team leader in the Army’s 3rd Ranger Battalion and completed multiple tours to Iraq and Afghanistan. He is a graduate of the Army’s Airborne, Ranger, and Sniper Schools and Honor Graduate of the 75th Ranger Regiment’s Ranger Indoctrination Program.

    Follow Paul on X at @paul_scharre.

  • Shaun Maguire is a venture capitalist, tech entrepreneur, and Caltech physics PhD. He joined Rep. Crenshaw to talk about his journey from Never Trumper in 2016 to supporting President Trump in 2024. Shaun makes the analytical case for why Trump’s method for foreign policy makes sense. Namely, Trump’s ability to flex American power in a language that Russia, Iran, Venezuela, and China understand. Shaun also explains why parts of Silicon Valley are moving right, why our defense industrial base is in dire need of repair, and the physics of how black holes work.

    Becoming a Reformed Never Trumper Revelations About the Trump-Russia Hoax Recruited by DARPA – War in Afghanistan Narrative Violations – Trump at NATO The Hunter Biden Laptop Trump’s ‘Peace Through Strength’ Doctrine Trump’s Record of Countering Russia Deep Undercover Russian Spies How to Negotiate with the East Tips to Avoid Broken Brain Syndrome Has X Been Good for Free Speech? Politics in Silicon Valley Defense Startups + DoD Procurement tHe MiLiTaRy InDuStRiAL cOMpLeX The Deepest Mysteries in Physics Black Holes and the Beginning of the Universe Quantum Gravity, Bottled Water, and “The Bulk” Known Unknowns in Physics How LIGO Detects Gravitational Waves (for Dummies)

    Shaun Maguire is a partner at the venture capital firm, Sequoia Capital. He has founded two companies (one in space technologies and another in global internet security) and holds a PhD in physics from Caltech. Shaun also previously worked at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). He was deployed to Afghanistan for three months and his team received a Joint Meritorious Unit Award for their work. Follow him on X at @shaunmmaguire.

  • *SPECIAL CROSSPOST EPISODE*

    Rep. Crenshaw joined Michael Moynihan and Matt Welch for their weekly podcast series The Fifth Column. Really fun conversation covering a lot of ground. Topics include:

    · How to be a Navy SEAL

    · Losing an eye in Afghanistan

    · Dan can’t find his glasses / “I can’t see shit”

    · Lessons from Iraq and Afghanistan

    · A case study in intelligence failure and confirmation bias

    · On leaving the Taliban in power

    · Has Trump been good on foreign policy?

    · The Republican Party post-Trump

    · Tucker "is best friends with Hunter Biden!”

    · Why are you even in Congress?

    · On the mechanics of Congress

    · Maybe a hundred normal congressmen

    · What has Dan accomplished for Texas?

    · Is populism winning?

    · On banning TikTok

    Michael Moynihan is a former contributor for Daily Beast and Vice on HBO. Follow him on X at @mcmoynihan.

    Matt Welch is the Editor at Large of Reason. Follow him on X at @MattWelch.

    Subscribe to The Fifth Column on Substack here: https://www.wethefifth.com/podcast

  • In honor of Columbus Day, we’re reposting a Hold These Truths classic from 2020 with historian Dr. Mary Grabar:

    You may have never heard of him, but no historian has had a greater influence on modern America than Howard Zinn. His most popular work, A Peoples History of the United States, was brought into the cultural mainstream with Matt Damon's Oscar winning 1997 film Good Will Hunting. The book is a precursor to the 1619 Project - tracing the roots of America's sins and inequities to Christopher Columbus' 1492 voyage and the rise of capitalism.

    So for Columbus Day, we invited Dr. Mary Grabar, a historian and author of "Debunking Howard Zinn: Exposing the Fake History That Turned A Generation Against America", to join us for an objective look at Zinn's perspective on American history, his motivations for attacking the USA and capitalism, and the ramifications of his influence on generations of academia.

    Dr. Mary Grabar is an author and a resident fellow at the The Alexander Hamilton Institute for the Study of Western Civilization. She is also the founder of the Dissident Prof Education Project. Follow her on Twitter at @MaryGrabar.

  • Sixty years ago, Americans could easily envision a not-too-distant future of vacations on Mars, miracle cures, clean and infinite energy, and, of course, flying cars. But the dream collapsed, we entered an era of technological and economic stagnation, and pop culture became fixated on catastrophizing the outcomes of scientific innovations. AEI’s James Pethokoukis traces the origins of this “Great Downshift” in optimism and progress – largely due to 1970s regulatory decisions and changes in risk tolerance – and he gives us a roadmap for returning to the era of a risk-taking, future-oriented society.

    James Pethokoukis is the author of “The Conservative Futurist: How to Create the Sci-Fi World We Were Promised.” He is a senior fellow and the DeWitt Wallace Chair at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where he analyzes US economic policy, writes and edits the AEIdeas blog, and hosts AEI’s Political Economy podcast. He is also a contributor to CNBC and writes the Faster, Please! newsletter on Substack. Follow him on X at @JimPethokoukis.

  • Dr. Todd Rose joins Rep. Crenshaw to discuss his latest research into Americans’ views on the most controversial issues, including abortion, immigration, the defund the police movement, and antisemitism. The conclusion? It turns out Americans are a lot less divided than you might think. Dr. Rose identifies the root causes of this false polarization and calls attention to a far greater concern for the future of the country: the overwhelming majority of Americans who believe society is inherently unfair to them.

    Check out Dr. Rose's latest research report here: https://populace.org/research

    Dr. Todd Rose is the author of "Collective Illusions: Conformity, Complicity, and the Science of Why We Make Bad Decisions". He is the co-founder and president of Populace, a think tank committed to ensuring that all people have the opportunity to pursue fulfilling lives in a thriving society. He was a faculty member at Harvard University where he founded the Laboratory for the Science of Individuality and directed the Mind, Brain, and Education Program. Follow him on X at @ltoddrose.

  • Jack Posobiec returns for a fascinating conversation about the history of communist revolutions and the role that information warfare plays in the shaping modern political ideologies. Jack gives us case studies in the revolutions of Russia, China, and France - along with the key differences between them and the American Revolution. He explains how Marxist and far-left movements “unhumanize” their political opponents to gain control of nations. And he dives into the tactics of information warfare and his strategy for countering far-left narratives (including a crash course in how to effectively use memes and satire to disarm opponents).

    Jack Posobiec is the author of the new book “Unhumans: The Secret History of Communist Revolutions (and How to Crush Them)”. He is the host of the podcast series Human Events Daily. He speaks fluent Mandarin, worked for the US Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, is a former officer in the Navy Reserve, and worked for the Office of Naval Intelligence. Follow him on X at @JackPosobiec.

  • Dr. Robert Kadlec returns to the podcast to share the latest evidence for why COVID-19 likely originated from a lab in Wuhan, China. He gives us a layman’s understanding of the differences between lab-created viruses and those of zoological origins. He debunks all the Fauci/CCP arguments that the Wuhan lab origin is a “conspiracy theory.” And he discusses the growing concerns of a possible H5N1 bird flu pandemic – what would it take for this to become the next global pandemic and how prepared are we to stop it?

    Dr. Robert Kadlec served as the Assistant Secretary of Preparedness and Response (ASPR) at the Department of Health and Human Services under President Trump. During his career he has served as a flight surgeon in the U.S. Air Force, Deputy Staff Director for the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, and Special Assistant to the President & Senior Director for Biodefense Policy under President Bush.

  • Congressman Jake Auchincloss was a Marine Corps officer, and is a member of Rep. Crenshaw’s Task Force to Combat Mexican Drug Cartels and a member of the Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party. He joined Rep. Crenshaw to discuss what they’ve learned about China’s partnership with the cartels to push fentanyl in the United States. They discuss the challenges and possibilities of collaborating with the Mexican government to destroy the drug cartels. And they have a friendly debate over Trump vs Kamala.

    Rep. Jake Auchincloss represents the 4th Congressional District of Massachusetts. He is a Marine veteran who commanded infantry in Afghanistan and led drug interdictions in Panama. Follow him on X at @RepAuchincloss.

  • In this special cross-post episode of The Winston Marshall Show, the former Mumford & Sons musician engages Rep. Crenshaw in a wide-ranging discussion on U.S. foreign policy, including populist arguments for isolationism. The conversation covers America’s involvement in the Ukraine War, the Israel-Hamas conflict, and compares President Biden’s most significant foreign policy failures with President Trump’s record. They also delve into the realities of the ‘deep state’ and the internal divisions within the Republican Party driven by the populist movement.

    Subscribe and listen to The Winston Marshall Show here: https://linktr.ee/winstonmarshall

    Follow Winston on X at @MrWinMarshall and Instagram at @winstonmarshall.

  • Foreign policy analyst Dr. Hal Brands joined Rep. Crenshaw to discuss why America abandoned pre-WWII isolationism to become the global superpower and the unprecedented prosperity that came from it. They examine the growing threats posed by Russia and China to that prosperity and the international order. And they look at the potential consequences for America if it retreats again to an isolationist foreign policy.

    Dr. Hal Brands is a Senior Fellow at American Enterprise Institute and the Henry A. Kissinger Distinguished Professor of Global Affairs at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. Dr. Brands has served as Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Strategic Planning and lead writer for the Commission on the National Defense Strategy for the United States. He is a member of the State Department's Foreign Affairs Policy Board and consults with a range of government offices and agencies in the intelligence and national security communities. Follow him on X at @HalBrands.

  • Meteorologist Dan Reilly answers all your burning questions about weather, hurricanes, and how forecasting works. What does a 50% chance of rain actually mean? How do weather patterns in the Pacific, like El Niño and La Niña, affect hurricane formation in the Atlantic? Can a butterfly’s wings cause a tornado? Where do storms get their names? All that and much more in just 30 minutes.

    Dan Reilly is the Warning Coordination Meteorologist for the National Weather Service/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He received his Master’s degree in Meteorology from MIT. Follow him on X at @DReillyWx.

    Website resources mentioned in this episode:

    Weather.gov

    Hurricanes.gov

  • Healthcare and economic policy expert Brian Blase, Ph.D. joined Rep. Crenshaw for a deep dive into the complexities of healthcare policy. They discuss the current problems with Obamacare and its impact on the healthcare market, the ongoing debate over healthcare as a right versus a need, the effectiveness of subsidies, and the role of high risk pools. They also discuss various policy proposals, including reforming subsidies, expanding healthcare options, and addressing Medicaid challenges.

    Brian Blase, Ph.D., is the President of Paragon Health Institute. Brian was Special Assistant to the President for Economic Policy at the White House’s National Economic Council (NEC) from 2017-2019, where he coordinated the development and execution of numerous health policies. Follow him on X at @brian_blase and learn more about his research at www.paragoninstitute.org

  • Clean burning natural gas is almost single-handedly responsible for the global reduction in carbon emissions. Every good thing we have in modern society – technology, housing, medicine, infrastructure, the list goes on – is dependent on natural gas to exist. So why is the Biden-Harris Administration so hell-bent on destroying it? Toby Rice, energy expert and president of America’s largest natural gas producer, returns to the podcast to examine the impact that recent natural gas rules have had on our economy and American energy security.

    Toby Rice is the President and CEO of EQT. Follow Toby on Twitter at @Shalennial.